Newspapers / The Dunn Dispatch (Dunn, … / Sept. 26, 1922, edition 1 / Page 6
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lad MWcl«ll> dM chUdrcn. 1» to trite m that auk to bet. •Ma) t» eMMrea. Smy mi kaow* that. Bat ftitofi all Un ne» tkaoafct knr Md · m% feed band, ' Wer » HtHW leadar. playinc tWj rery beat el the aerVl'» aaaic, can *l—to«o the ebOd1» ambtttoa to ton >»4 to play good ntoc. Me child wto understands Kl*b etaee auit will mr cat· greatly fer "jaaa" and the general rea ei taw elaea fence ball mutât. Utoer «.aim TeOto I eehliig ever the tethering of weekly newspaper pabltoben at the Nerth Carolina Ττι· Aaaeciatiew meet at Shelby tut week I think I rftoeerered wky so many of tm die peer eiain* «ρ the buueh at Shelby I vrete then km at »ntf per cent idoJIila • Ideeitots are not rood buafeem men. Their goddeea to net the dollar, Aad their*· to a very bi^aitant business, Λ+eaMat ·ρο· khe patronage of KAer to toe often victimise by the ■apaiter batoaea brains of the com munity.—The beat business brains la th· cemmnnity are forever alert to haauaar down hi* UmtWiir rate· ». la attemptiag to nut businees the ideattot pob I'aalitl •ι '3 s- y ùi ·<1 ii ju'wa cob •°. -·' '■> ■ te ο λ*. t,l tl.4 lubjcr!; ;> fci· piprr. The aw.tui* foun ;.· ;.i bM/tc> hu a hud row to ho·; V ty 7«uv·' *zrr how he livaj arj * -L it <w 1 v*i at all e;»d many pes ·:'■* hvJ tu il'.oinpt to rait hii bua! ·.* on α ηατγΐ.* of pro ft that mahaa -4 allowance at all for avrrhaad "TI h .Ha host bailnaaa brain* la the - -m-n^mlty pitted acainat ha idaailam 't it any wowiar aoroa pab'itht.· IWc f om hand to iMath? TS· nmpaptr la jo*t aa neeaarary and Important ta your town aa jour «boot and ehorefeaa. You cannot pro are·· without yomr a^oal hoo«o and jour church. Semerrtore oat in Iowa tkvra ia a thriring town that haa no thurtfcaa and hare and there ana wfll And a town that baa na wvapap tr of Ita own; but the·· ara exerp tlona. With ita many and conplas aetivl tlfi today rwith all tba outride af faira rauliiw open and aCeetine it, you could not know your own town. And tSa (net man of people odtaide your town would no* know your town at all bat for ita newspaper·. Sliia Vth City jrowi and Artre» much bc cauac of tha Independent broadcaati interesting «tuff about Pliahath City to tha home· Bf tliouaandu of rural lljlJIJIJIIIIIJItaanOBMBWqBWWtWI ——— ι ι—im readers and to lirvten mad capitsl· jl· far away fretn home. week after weak. Alt Th« Independent Ka· succeed wl far belter than moat weekly pap ota in ita 8Ute ta bwtun there uy aero apprec iatiw people la Etlaabetii City tkaa Id ao many towns in the State. The beat bwio«aa brsSos ol Elisabeth City in alive to the valoa of a Ihr· and forceful organ of pub liait y far their town.—Glaabeth City Independent. KNOW NORTH CAROLINA— DAIRYING IN CAROLINA ι The <r»e t variety of feed cropi wVch grow to perfection tn Nortl Carolina, her long growing eeaaor making poaaible two eie|x a year good market» for dairy product» ant! a mild climate, are conditions thai make dairy tornfing la tMa itth oqual to any U many reopeeta roper ior to thoae offered by th« best dain states in the Union. One might assume that tbure wook be no shortage of dairy producta it α state where such favorable condl lions exist. However, such is the ease Especially Im there a ehortajfr in tin copiai and tidewater sectiona of th< itate, wfcere there is only one cov -rulj te every 14.4 ptnocu. If all the mflk producvd In thil pert of tfco itmte was costumed In the raw from the a roonnt available per peraoa would be let* than one-half pint per day, or ■boat one-fourth the quantity that rich child should have la order to de velop a ttrong, healthy body and mind. The email number of cowi found In Eu item North Carolina run partly be accounted for by the hfcch per crot of tenant labor oxd in operat ing the tanna. Id the part, many of the landlord·, adhering to a one-crop tytteni of farming, have felt that Κ ' *u impractical for their tenante to I own cawt. Horw long thia condition will r*i»i it b difficult to nay, but It will be safe to predict that the number of cow· In thia «action will not be materially incmaad until both landlord and tenant realltc that milk it the best and ehcapeet food ob tainable, and that It It a neceeeary part of the human diet. I-i the picifmont and mountain tee tiont of the State where a much more dive reified ayttem of firming Is practiced, the number of milk cows per farm U much larger. Here an • adequate fupp I y of milk and bottai ι it available for each family and t considerable amount it produced foi the market. Thers are »l*i«eo créa* eriUi twenty chr-nae faclor·*·, aavrn nilk plant·, and n*hU«i ice crcam factories operating in Uilt section. About G,600 farmer* are dcllr/Mlnf »oar cream to the·* creameriea for the manufacturing of butter. The production of crmn with the»e farmer* te a idde line. They keep a ««Blcient number of cow· ta conratme all roughar* irrewn o- i.\c farm and to ρ—turc land wh'rh *nuld otker ; «rite return no dividend·. In ivUditiito ι to furnaiiing a good mrr\<t. on we 'lrrm, for . the rouyhatce. the datey I cow retmnt a monthly caih income· I She furnlaho· profitable and romtart employment for frrm labor and msVe* ponesble the reduction of fe» tillaer billa by cunierving »o'l fer tility. The production nf cream for cream crfta i.; a form of dairy farming which ii well »i «pied to any aection of North Oarolini·, «η·Ι if there wa* ] an nvorau* of four milk ccw< per : farm in thi« tlate instead of 1.07, the pr*Jcnt annual irwmc of twenty ' four million! front ihte lource «mold j be Sucreaje'l to rlWty-ldx million·, lard thj L» poceiblr without additional j labor rc*t per farm. -J. A. Arey, ,Steti Farm Kxt«n«!on Srry re, Dairy Diviaion. NEWEST Surely We Will Meet At The In Muk Oct. 10 To 13 • Λ * JSàu.· ' TO SEE THE GREAT EXHIBITS FRo\l THE FINE FARMS AND SCHOOLS OF HARNETTK ' v'V SAMPSON, JOHNSTON~ÀHp CUNBttl^AND < i;*V t: ' '· . , · Λ · * * "··-· ·,·'· ·" !, 'y ·»♦ · ·"*> ··* John J. Parker Makes Opening Address He waa Republican Candidate for Governor two years ago and is considered to be one of the beat speakers in North Carqlnuu Come and hear 1»™ TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10TH. CHILD HEALTH CONFERENCE DAILY EXAMINATION BRING YOUR CHILDREN FOR FREE Brown-Dyer Circus And Carnival Shows THIRTY-FIVE CAR LOADS OF FUN AND FROLIC — WILD A ΝIM A L S — Wtt£> ·WEST HIPPODROME — 1 Λ THREE BANDS HORSE RACES — RUNNING AND TROTTING—BIGGEST PROGRAM YET—RACES DAILY Fireworks Tues, and Wednesday Nights MOST SPECTACULAR DISPLAYS EVER PRESENTED » · Overland Anto Given Away SOME VISITOR TQTHE FAIR WILL GET THIS 5 PASSENGER CAR JUST PURCHASED FROM E.V.GAINEY, DEALER. A COUPON GIVEN WITH EVERY ADMISSION TICKET. — — YOU MAY GET THE CAR : • ι - ' '·· . 4 r "*« «V · ' ' BIG PROGRAM OF FREE ACTS^— ^BIG PROGRAM OF FREE ACTS "... · - ·*. - " ' r
The Dunn Dispatch (Dunn, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 26, 1922, edition 1
6
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